For Canada Day, we"re peering up at "Passage migratoire" ("Migratory Passage"), an art installation of hanging woven canoes in Old Québec City. It was part of the 2016 edition of Passages Insolites (Unusual Passages), an annual public art exhibition in the historic Petit-Champlain and Saint-Roch districts of the city. The canoe has long been associated with Canada"s national history, linked with early explorers, fur traders, Indigenous peoples, and colonists who ventured out into the wilderness of the great north. The artist behind this installation, Giorgia Volpe, was inspired by "the idea of migration and its influence on the formation of our society and our territory." Canada welcomes on average about 200,000 immigrants each year, many of whom will become Canadian citizens. The migrations continue…
Celebrating migrations
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Wanderin Wawayanda
-
Pollinator Week
-
A garden of prickly delights
-
Spreadsheet Day
-
National Park Service Founders Day
-
Ice and Snow Sailing World Championships
-
A winter wonderland in Northeast China
-
Whitehaven Beach, Whitsunday Island, Australia
-
Vermilion Cliffs National Monument
-
Make your list and check it twice
-
Winter solstice
-
The ruins of Italica, Andalusia, Spain
-
It’s Art Deco Weekend in Miami
-
Talk like a pirate—or walk the plank
-
A gentle wind fills this sail
-
Happy 300th, NOLA!
-
Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico
-
Longtailed widowbird at Rietvlei Nature Reserve, South Africa
-
Autumn comes to Old Town
-
National Mushroom Month
-
A traboule in Lyon, France
-
Megalong Valley, Blue Mountains National Park, Australia
-
Juneteenth
-
International Day of Light
-
International Day for Biological Diversity
-
April Fools Day
-
Frankenstein Friday
-
The ‘Night of Nights’
-
Boxing Day—a shopper’s delight
-
A polar bear near Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

